EVENT UPDATES

When the 2018 $50,000 Poker Players Championship ended, about 40 people spilled onto the World Series of Poker stage and began chanting.

"Grind-er! Grind-er! Grind-er!"

The legend of Michael Mizrachi grows again.

Mizrachi won the PPC for an unprecedented third time, taking down $1,239,126 in prize money for the sixth seven-figure score in what seems certain to go down as a career for the ages. He also won the ultra-prestigious event in 2010 and 2012.

It's the fourth bracelet overall for Grinder, who also won a WSOP Europe event in 2011.

"It's quite an accomplishment," he admitted. "To win the first one was amazing. The second one was great. The third one is unheard of."

Official Final Table Results

Place

Winner

Country

Prize (USD)

1

Michael Mizrachi

United States

$1,239,126

2

John Hennigan

United States

$765,837

3

Dan Smith

United States

$521,782

4

Mike Leah

Canada

$364,197

5

Benny Glaser

United Kingdom

$260,578

6

Aaron Katz

United States

$191,234

Considering Mizrachi's incredible history of deep runs in the PPC — twice having his name etched on the David "Chip" Reese Memorial Trophy plus a fourth-place finish in 2016 and an agonizing bubble bustout in 2017 — and the fact he bagged chip lead on each of the last three days, it may look like he was destined for victory.

In fact, Mizrachi said, he had a poor Day 1 and showed up late to Day 2, fumbling his coffee as he rushed to take his seat.

"It was a seven-minute delay," he said. "We had to move tables. After that, everything turned around. It was a good move by me."

Indeed, Grinder turned things around and proceeded to utterly dominate. He scarcely conceded the lead after gaining it on Day 2 despite operating in the typically elite field the PPC brings out. The final 11 players featured eight multiple-time bracelet winners, including icon Phil Ivey, two-time PPC winner Brian Rast and 2014 PPC champ "Johnny World" Hennigan.

Knowing they have to face a lineup that can chew up any seasoned pro and spit out his or her bones, many people would study up on their preferred poker resources, be they books, simulations or charts. Others would ratchet up the mental preparation. At the very least, most would look to come in well-rested with a good night's sleep.

Aspiring PPC champs looking to emulate Mizrachi's success should take note: that isn't his formula. He said he was out late plenty during the tournament, getting just a few hours of sleep before hitting the gym in the morning. He donned a necklace of lava beads given to him by his girlfriend's brother as a good-luck charm, sat down and crushed.

The 2018 PPC final table.

He came into the final table with a big chip lead against Hennigan, Dan Smith, Benny Glaser, Aaron Katz and Mike Leah. All talented and hugely motivated — particularly the bracelet-less Smith, who would go on to his sixth top-three finish — but all seemed like so much fodder to be minced by Grinder. He was simply running too hot, making nut hands left, right and center.

"I never had big swings this whole tournament," Mizrachi admitted. "All the cards went my way. I hit a bunch of hands. Everything went my way. I just won every pot."

Two key hands from the final table stood out. Smith pushed hard three-handed and moved into the lead against Hennigan and Mizrachi. However, Mizrachi reasserted himself in a massive 2-7 Triple Draw hand wherein he drew three and instantly made a wheel. He got four bets in against Smith, with Hennigan putting in two for good measure. Smith drew and then made the third nuts, so they got three more bets in before Smith just called a single bet on the end when they both patted.

Then, the biggest hand of the tournament went down in a three-bet Omaha Hi-Lo pot that saw Mizrachi flop Broadway and slowplay before raising the turn to get two bets from both of his opponents. Smith paid off a river bet and Mizrachi suddenly had a hammerlock on things with two-thirds of the chips in play.

After Smith lost his remaining chips, the two former PPC champs took a break and then met back up to determine whether "Johnny World" would join the ranks of two-time winners or Grinder would be the first to No. 3.

Johnny World came up just shy of his second PPC title.

The match didn't last long as 2-7 Triple Draw proved to be Mizrachi's boon once again. He won two big hands there and then finished Hennigan in old standby No-Limit Hold'em, the game where Mizrachi first made his name. They played a three-bet pot and Hennigan stacked off with an open-ender postflop but ran into Mizrachi's second pair and a flush draw. A ten of hearts on the turn locked it up for Grinder, as it completed his draw.

The crowd exploded onto the stage and began chanting for Mizrachi before cramming themselves into photos together.

"When you have a great group of friends, family and fans, it's an amazing feeling," Mizrachi said of the crowd. "It boosts my confidence. I think it helped me out. I felt like I had to do this for them."

Mizrachi had quite the rail cheering him on.

Mizrachi matched brother Rob at the top of the family rankings with four bracelets and joked that he's going to ramp up his playing schedule just to move into first by himself.

Dinner table bragging rights aside, Grinder has forced observers and players alike to consider his place in poker lore. Three PPC titles, a fourth bracelet, two WPT titles and nearly $17 million in cashes paints a picture of one of the most accomplished players in tournament history.

With this title, Mizrachi said felt he had done enough to cement a place in the Poker Hall of Fame. And as far as his ability at the table goes, while he acknowledged he still has doubters, he feels even they have to give him credit at this point.

"I think I've done enough to where people will give me the respect I deserve," he said.

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 10:08 PM Local Time

WSOP All Time Poker Players Championship Results by Player

The Poker Players Championship is one of the most prestigious events around the world, and some of the best players have made their mark in this event.

Michael Mizrachi is now the only three-time winner ahead of two-time winner Brian Rast. Consequently, they both sit first and second on the all time list for Poker Players Championship earnings. On the back of a win two years ago, and a second place this year, John Hennigan sits third, while Freddy Deeb sits fourth on the back of winning the Poker Players Championship with the biggest first prize.

The only two players in the top ten that haven't won a Poker Players Championship is Andy Bloch and John Hanson. Bloch took second back in 2005 to David "Chip" Reese while also adding a further three cashes and one final table. Hanson sits ninth overall on the back of two final tables and two cashes.

WSOP All Time Poker Players Championship Results by Player

Rank

Player

Country

Wins

Final Tables

Cashes

Earnings

1st

Michael Mizrachi

United States

3

4

4

$4,630,641

2nd

Brian Rast

United States

2

2

3

$3,160,474

3rd

John Hennigan

United States

1

3

4

$3,091,166

4th

Freddy Deeb

Lebanon

1

1

2

$2,360,462

5th

Matthew Ashton

United Kingdom

1

1

3

$2,025,385

6th

Scotty Nguyen

United States

1

1

1

$1,989,120

7th

Andy Bloch

United States

--

2

4

$1,813,988

8th

David "Chip" Reese

United States

1

1

1

$1,784,640

9th

John Hanson

United States

--

2

2

$1,641,679

10th

Mike Gorodinsky

United States

1

1

3

$1,519,715

11th

Elior Sion

United Kingdom

1

1

2

$1,512,338

12th

Bruno Fitoussi

France

--

2

2

$1,448,599

13th

David Bach

United States

1

1

2

$1,436,646

14th

Michel DeMichele

United States

--

1

1

$1,243,200

15th

Chris Klodnicki

United States

--

2

2

$1,148,249

16th

Vladimir Schemelev

Russia

--

1

2

$1,131,904

17th

Don Nguyen

United States

--

1

1

$1,096,254

18th

Phil Hellmuth

United States

--

1

1

$1,063,034

19th

Matt Glantz

United States

--

2

3

$1,044,458

20th

Minh Ly

United States

--

2

2

$975,593

21st

Brandon Shack-Harris

United States

--

1

1

$937,975

22nd

Barry Greenstein

United States

--

2

4

$928,919

23rd

Phil Ivey

United States

--

1

3

$889,047

24th

Jean-Robert Bellande

United States

--

1

2

$873,455

25th

Johannes Becker

Germany

--

1

1

$862,649

26th

Justin Bonomo

United States

--

1

1

$801,048

27th

Erick Lindgren

United States

--

1

1

$781,440

28th

David Singer

United States

--

2

2

$749,280

29th

David Oppenheim

United States

--

1

2

$745,545

30th

Huck Seed

United States

--

2

3

$708,651

31st

David "ODB" Baker

United States

--

1

2

$657,123

32nd

Abe Mosseri

United States

--

1

3

$642,726

33rd

Isaac Haxton

United States

--

1

1

$595,812

34th

Jesse Martin

United States

--

1

1

$594,570

35th

Amnon Filippi

United States

--

1

1

$586,080

36th

Lyle Berman

United States

--

1

2

$573,957

37th

Jim Bechtel

United States

--

1

1

$549,120

38th

Eric Wasserson

United States

--

1

1

$545,772

39th

Daniel Negreanu

Canada

--

1

3

$535,634

40th

Erik Sagstrom

Sweden

--

1

1

$522,393

41st

Dan Smith

United States

--

1

1

$521,782

42nd

Robert Mizrachi

United States

--

1

3

$516,650

43rd

David Benyamine

France

--

1

1

$497,122

44th

Daniel Alaei

United States

--

1

3

$492,771

45th

Scott Seiver

United States

--

1

3

$484,567

46th

Owais Ahmed

United States

--

1

1

$482,058

47th

T.J. Cloutier

United States

--

1

1

$480,480

48th

Dewey Tomko

United States

--

1

2

$474,624

49th

Mike Wattel

United States

--

1

3

$467,046

50th

Kenny Tran

United States

--

1

1

$444,000

51st

John Juanda

Indonesia

--

1

1

$436,865

52nd

Ivo Donev

Austria

--

1

1

$419,337

53rd

Luke Schwartz

United Kingdom

--

1

1

$406,736

54th

Doyle Brunson

United States

--

1

2

$398,880

55th

Ralph Perry

United States

--

--

3

$392,200

56th

George Danzer

Germany

--

1

1

$388,523

57th

Vitaly Lunkin

Russia

--

1

1

$368,812

58th

Mike Leah

Canada

--

1

1

$364,197

59th

Ben Sulsky

United States

--

1

1

$353,928

60th

Roland Israelashvili

United States

--

1

1

$ 317,882

61st

Paul Volpe

United States

--

1

2

$312,813

62nd

Jonathan Duhamel

Canada

--

1

2

$307,018

63rd

George Lind

United States

--

1

1

$300,441

64th

Ray Dehkharghani

United States

--

1

2

$299,617

65th

Aaron Katz

United Kingdom

--

1

2

$288,562

66th

Chun Lei Zhou

Macau

--

1

1

$286,122

67th

Tommy Hang

United States

--

--

2

$279,292

68th

Shaun Deeb

United States

--

--

2

$275,733

69th

Will Wilkinson

United States

--

1

1

$272,558

70th

David "Bakes" Baker

United States

--

1

1

$272,275

71st

Benny Glaser

United Kingdom

--

1

1

$260,578

72nd

Stephen Chidwick

United Kingdom

--

1

1

$253,497

73rd

Jeff Lisandro

Australia

--

--

2

$248,635

74th

Patrick Bueno

France

--

1

1

$230,880

75th

Ville Wahlbeck

Finland

--

1

1

$219,655

76th

Frank Kassela

United States

--

1

1

$212,829

77th

Patrik Antonius

Finland

--

--

1

$205,920

78th

Robert Williamson III

United States

--

--

1

$205,920

79th

Gavin Smith

Canada

--

--

1

$205,920

80th

Bill Chen

United States

--

1

1

$205,856

81st

Brett Richey

United States

--

--

2

$204,579

82nd

Ben Lamb

United States

--

1

1

$201,338

83rd

Joe Cassidy

United States

--

--

2

$193,227

84th

James Obst

Australia

--

--

2

$192,767

85th

Thor Hansen

Norway

--

1

1

$188,256

86th

Mike Matusow

United States

--

--

2

$186,128

87th

Dan Kelly

United States

--

1

1

$184,222

88th

Chau Giang

United States

--

1

1

$184,087

89th

Mikael Thuritz

Sweden

--

1

1

$182,463

90th

Raymond Davis

United States

--

--

1

$177,600

91st

Michael Glick

United States

--

--

1

$173,796

92nd

Jason Lester

United States

--

--

1

$168,529

93rd

Melissa Burr

United States

--

1

1

$165,435

94th

Erik Seidel

United States

--

1

1

$162,381

95th

Nick Schulman

United States

--

--

1

$152,730

96th

Alexander Kostritsyn

Russia

--

--

1

$152,730

97th

Bryn Kenney

United States

--

--

1

$147,882

98th

Greg Mueller

Canada

--

--

1

$144,049

99th

Yan Chen

United States

--

--

1

$143,400

100th

Joseph Michael

United States

--

--

1

$142,080

101st

Jason Mercier

United States

--

--

1

$139,265

102nd

Shawn Buchanan

Canada

--

--

1

$139,265

103rd

David Levi

United States

--

--

1

$137,280

104th

Cong Do

United States

--

--

1

$137,280

105th

Allen Kessler

United States

--

1

1

$134,101

106th

Gabe Kaplan

United States

--

--

1

$131,424

107th

Kevin Song

United States

--

--

1

$128,620

108th

Ian Johns

United States

--

--

1

$125,142

109th

Josh Arieh

United States

--

--

1

$124,723

110th

Mike Binger

United States

--

--

1

$124,723

111th

Gus Hansen

Denmark

--

--

1

$123,895

112th

Mark Gregorich

United States

--

--

1

$117,216

113th

Stephen Wolff

United States

--

--

1

$117,216

114th

Rep Porter

United States

--

--

1

$116,571

115th

Todd Brunson

United States

--

--

1

$115,447

116th

Allen Bari

United States

--

--

1

$113,030

117th

Troy Burkholder

United States

--

--

1

$111,893

118th

Justin Smith

United States

--

--

1

$110,073

119th

Sebastian Ruthenberg

Germany

--

--

1

$108,503

120th

Viktor Blom

Sweden

--

--

1

$105,235

121st

Tim Phan

United States

--

--

1

$103,008

122nd

Greg Raymer

United States

--

--

1

$103,008

123rd

David Chiu

United States

--

--

1

$99,590

124th

Ilya Bulychev

Russia

--

--

1

$98,330

125th

Chris Reslock

United States

--

--

1

$88,800

126th

Chris Vitch

United States

--

--

1

$88,627

127th

John Racener

United States

--

--

1

$87,010

128th

Tony G

Lithuania

--

--

1

$83,630

129th

Talal Shakerchi

United Kingdom

--

--

1

$77,320

130th

Steve Billirakis

United States

--

--

1

$72,914

131st

John Kabbaj

United Kingdom

--

--

1

$72,914

132nd

Yehuda Buchalter

United States

--

--

1

$72,500

133rd

Randy Ohel

United States

--

--

1

$72,500

134th

Gary Benson

Australia

--

--

1

$55,947

Totals

16

13

96

198

$71,136,001

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 10:04 PM Local Time

WSOP All Time Poker Players Championship Results by Country

Since the inaugural version of the Poker Players Championship through until this very day, there have been 13 versions of the Poker Player Championship. In total, 16 different countries have been represented with an in-the-money finish.

The United States leads the way with 95 individual players, while the remainder of the countries all have less then 10 representatives. Here is how the statistics break down:

Rank

Country

Players

Wins

Final Tables

Cashes

PPC Earnings

1st

United States

95

10

72

148

$53,814,188

2nd

United Kingdom

8

2

5

11

$4,706,096

3rd

Canada

6

--

3

9

$1,696,083

4th

Russia

4

0

2

5

$1,751,776

T-5th

France

3

0

4

4

$2,176,601

T-5th

Germany

3

0

2

3

$1,359,675

T-5th

Sweden

3

0

2

3

$810,091

T-5th

Australia

3

--

--

5

$497,349

9th

Finland

2

0

1

2

$425,575

T-10th

Lebanon

1

1

1

2

$2,360,462

T-10th

Indonesia

1

--

1

1

$436,865

T-10th

Austria

1

--

1

1

$419,337

T-10th

Macau

1

--

1

1

$286,122

T-10th

Norway

1

--

1

1

$188,256

T-10th

Denmark

1

--

--

1

$123,895

T-10th

Lithuania

1

--

--

1

$83,630

Totals

134

13

96

198

$71,136,001

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:48 PM Local Time

John Hennigan Eliminated in 2nd Place ($765,837)

No-Limit Hold'em

Michael Mizrachi raised to 225,000 from the button, John Hennigan three-bet to 750,000 from the big blind and Mizrachi called.

The flop came down and Hennigan continued for 700,000. Mizrachi raised to 2,000,000, Hennigan reraised all in for about 5,300,000 and Mizrachi called instantly with for a pair of nines with a flush draw. Hennigan held for an open-ended straight draw.

As the Mizrachi hollered, with the crowd calling for a heart, the turn fell to give Mizrachi a winning flush, rendering the river (and Hennigan's straight) moot.

John Hennigan finished in second place for $765,937.

Michael Mizrachi

21,750,000

5,800,000

John Hennigan

0

-5,800,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:38 PM Local Time

Mizrachi Running Away

2-7 Triple Draw

John Hennigan limped in and Michael Mizrachi raised from the big blind. Hennigan called.

On the first draw, Mizrachi took two while Hennigan took three. Mizrachi then bet. Hennigan raised. Mizrachi made it three bets and Hennigan called.

Mizrachi took one card on the second draw while Hennigan stood pat. Mizrachi then checked and called a bet from Hennigan.

On the final draw, Mizrachi stood pat and Hennigan decided to break and take one. Both players checked it down and Mizrachi showed up his and it was good for him to take down the pot as Hennigan mucked.

Michael Mizrachi

15,950,000

2,200,000

John Hennigan

5,800,000

-2,200,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:33 PM Local Time

Mizrachi Goes from Drawing Three to Winning Again

2-7 Triple Draw

John Hennigan raised on the button and Michael Mizrachi called. Mizrachi took three and Hennigan one. Mizrachi checked dark, Hennigan bet and Mizrachi called. They both drew one and Mizrachi check-raised. Hennigan released.

Michael Mizrachi

13,750,000

2,000,000

John Hennigan

8,000,000

-2,000,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:26 PM Local Time

Trips For Hennigan

Limit Hold'em

Michael Mizrachi raised from the button and John Hennigan called from the big blind.

The flop came down , Hennigan checked, Mizrachi bet and Hennigan check-raised. Mizrachi called, the turn fell, Hennigan bet and Mizrachi called. The river completed the board, Hennigan bet and Mizrachi called.

Hennigan tabled for trip aces, Mizrachi mucked and Hennigan won the pot.

Michael Mizrachi

11,750,000

-800,000

John Hennigan

10,000,000

800,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:23 PM Local Time

Hennigan's Check-Raise Does Not Work Out

Limit Hold'em

On the button, Michael Mizrachi raised and John Hennigan called.

The flop was and Hennigan checked then called a bet from Mizrachi.

The turn was the and Hennigan checked again. Mizrachi put out a bet and Hennigan decided to check-raise. Mizrachi thought for a bit then called.

On the river, Hennigan checked over to Mizrachi. Mizrachi bet and Hennigan quickly folded.

Michael Mizrachi

12,550,000

1,450,000

John Hennigan

9,200,000

-1,450,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:21 PM Local Time

Hennigan Takes the First One

Limit Hold'em

John Hennigan raised on the button and fired every street as hit the board. Michael Mizrachi called down quickly until the river, at which point he tanked a bit and mucked.

Michael Mizrachi

11,100,000

-1,045,000

John Hennigan

10,650,000

1,045,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:17 PM Local Time

Cards in the Air

Heads-up play is underway!

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:07 PM Local Time

Heads-Up Chip Counts

Michael Mizrachi and John Hennigan are on a short break before heads-up play begins.

Michael Mizrachi

12,145,000

145,000

John Hennigan

9,605,000

0

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:04 PM Local Time

Dan Smith Eliminated in 3rd Place ($521,782)

Limit Hold'em

John Hennigan raised from the small blind and Dan Smith called from the big blind.

The flop came down , Hennigan bet, Smith raised all in for 365,000 and Hennigan called with , leading Smith's for an open-ended straight draw.

The turn kept Hennigan ahead and Smith found no help from the river, ending his tournament in third place.

John Hennigan

9,605,000

605,000

Dan Smith

0

-755,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 9:01 PM Local Time

Smith Picks Another Spot

Pot-Limit Omaha

Dan Smith opened with a raise to 350,000 on the button. Michael Mizrachi called from the small blind before John Hennigan announced "pot" from the big blind, making it 1,400,000. Smith immediately stood up from his seat.

"If two players bust in the same hand, does it go by chips?" Smith asked the floor for clarification. The floor confirmed. Smith thought for a bit longer then released his hand. Mizrachi immediately let go as well.

PokerStars Team Pro Maria Konnikova won't let a few (or many) bad beats damper her outlook on this year's World Series of Poker.

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 8:53 PM Local Time

Broadway For Mizrachi

Pot-Limit Omaha

Michael Mizrachi raised to 225,000 from the button and Dan Smith called from the big blind.

They checked to the river of a board where Mizrachi bet the pot of 500,000. Smith mulled it over for a little before he called.

Mizrachi tabled for Broadway, Smith flashed for two pair and Mizrachi won the pot.

Michael Mizrachi

12,200,000

700,000

Dan Smith

1,200,000

-700,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 8:49 PM Local Time

Smith Recovers a Bit From Mizrachi

Pot-Limit Omaha

Dan Smith limped in from the small blind and Michael Mizrachi raised to 300,000 from the big blind. Smith called and the two went heads-up to ta flop.

The flop was and both players checked. They checked again on the turn.

The river was the and Smith led for 375,000. Mizrachi tossed in a call. Smith showed down his and with his straight, Smith would take down the pot.

Michael Mizrachi

11,500,000

-700,000

Dan Smith

1,900,000

500,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 8:46 PM Local Time

Hennigan Pots and Wins

Pot-Limit Omaha

The three players saw a flop for the minimum and action checked to Michael Mizrachi, who bet 155,000 on the button. John Hennigan raised to 375,000 and only Mizrachi continued. The turn brought a and Hennigan checked. Mizrachi fired 855,000. Hennigan announced a pot-sized raise to 3,450,000 and that was enough to convince Mizrachi to lay down.

Michael Mizrachi

12,200,000

-1,700,000

John Hennigan

8,300,000

1,700,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 8:44 PM Local Time

Hennigan Dents Smith

Razz

John Hennigan: / /
Dan Smith: / /

John Hennigan was the bring in, Dan Smith completed and Hennigan defended. Smith bet on fourth street, Hennigan called, Smith bet on fifth street and Hennigan called. On sixth street Smith check-called a bet from Hennigan before leading out on seventh street.

Hennigan called and Smith flipped over for a queen-nine low. Hennigan tabled for a ten-seven to win the pot.

John Hennigan

6,600,000

2,100,000

Dan Smith

1,400,000

-2,000,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 8:35 PM Local Time

Mizrachi Taking Control

Omaha Hi-Lo

From the small blind Dan Smith raised and Michael Mizrachi made it three bets from the big blind. Smith called and the two went heads up to a flop.

On the flop, Smith checked. Mizrachi put out a bet and Smith let go of his hand.

Michael Mizrachi

13,900,000

600,000

Dan Smith

3,400,000

-600,000

Tuesday, June 19, 2018 8:34 PM Local Time

Mizrachi Surges into Big Lead

Omaha Hi-Lo

Michael Mizrachi raised on the button and John Hennigan made it three bets. Dan Smith called, as did Mizrachi. They saw a flop and Hennigan bet. Both players called.

The turn brought a and Hennigan fired again. Smith called and Mizrachi raised. Everyone stayed in to see the river. They checked to "Grinder" and he bet.

Hennigan double-checked his cards and mucked, but Smith tossed in a call and mucked to Mizrachi's for the nut straight.

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